Still listed as #3 despite the de-listing of Berkeley. I'm sure no one will apply to Berkeley now that it has be de-listed. |
USNews has ranked Princeton over Harvard consistently. Yet Harvard is still the benchmark and most will select Harvard over Princeton. The even sillier one is Stanford. It is the only school that can really rival Harvard, but USNews has it at #7. |
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The two asinine placements that stick out:
Stanford at #7 - easily #1b if not 1a to most teens Norte Dame in the 30s - obvious anti-Catholic bias, ND is the Catholic Ivy, students live in dorms all 4 years, no Greek life, just a wonderful pure college with overachieving service-minded kids |
| Go Blue! |
Wow. #1 public is Cornell.
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| UC Davis has moved up! That's where I went after getting rejected at UVA and William and Mary back in the 90's (I went to high school in California) |
There is logic and the rankings are not random. Read the methodology. |
That’s like reading the methodology for the National Enquirer or People’s ranking of colleges. Whatever their criteria is, you hane to wonder why accept their methodology and not others. You haven’t answered any question by pointing to their methodology. The question is here is, why their (weird) methodology? |
Who is requiring that you or anyone accept their methodology? If you don't agree, move on. |
Couldn't agree more |
Subscribe. It's worth it. |
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Y’all really need to get lives. UVA is a good school. There are other good schools. You are not a better person by virtue of having gone there. You are not a worse person if you went somewhere else.
I did look at the methodology. It is sound enough, but definitely favors the things WSJ readers prefer. |
Dumb that they don't include foreign universities. We subscribe to the WSJ and our kids will include them in their research. |
Michigan #27 |
Notre Dame was #26 last year. What hurts it is its "environment" ranking of >400 (basically lack of diversity). But its "outcome" ranking of 39 (graduation rate, salary, etc.), "resources" ranking of 31 (faculty per student, etc.), and "environment" ranking of 4 (how happy students are), pushes it up to its ranking of 32. It's no surprise about the environment ranking as it is a Catholic university which attracts a particular population. That said, it holds its own because of its excellent academic reputation and other factors. Interestingly, you can rank the schools on any one of these elements. Below is the WSJ Methodology: Methodology The overall methodology explores four key areas: Resources Does the college have the capacity to effectively deliver teaching? The Resources area represents 30 per cent of the overall ranking. Within this we look at: *Finance per student (11%) *Faculty per student (11%) *Research papers per faculty (8%) Engagement Does the college effectively engage with its students? Most of the data in this area are gathered through the THE US Student Survey. The Engagement area represents 20 per cent of the overall ranking. Within this we look at: *Student engagement (7%) *Student recommendation (6%) *Interaction with teachers and students (4%) *Number of accredited programmes (3%) Outcomes Does the college generate good and appropriate outputs? Does it add value to the students who attend? The Outcomes area represents 40 per cent of the overall ranking. Within this we look at: *Graduation rate (11%) *Value added to graduate salary (12%) *Debt after graduation (7%) *Academic reputation (10%) Environment Is the college providing a good learning environment for all students? Does it make efforts to attract a diverse student body and faculty? The Environment area represents 10 per cent of the overall ranking. Within this we look at: *Proportion of international students (2%) *Student diversity (3%) *Student inclusion (2%) *Staff diversity (3%) |